Chips Ahoy!
National Cookie Day seemed like the right moment to look at something familiar. Chips Ahoy has more history behind it than most people realize. Nabisco launched the brand in 1963 with the goal of taking the homemade chocolate chip cookie and turning it into a reliable, mass-produced standard. Even the name carried a twist. It played off the old nautical call “Ships Ahoy,” but a similar phrase appeared in Charles Dickens’ writing a century earlier. That small echo of literature gave the brand a surprising bit of depth for a packaged cookie.
The early advertising leaned into that sense of character. Nabisco introduced Cookie Man, a caped superhero who defended the world’s supply of chocolate chip cookies from various villains. It was pure 1960s television, but it turned Chips Ahoy into more than a snack. It became a brand kids recognized immediately.
Then came the “1,000 chips per bag” line. It followed the cookies for decades, sparking arguments about whether the number was real or just clever marketing. The accuracy didn’t matter as much as the idea. It became part of the myth.
On National Cookie Day, it is easy to think about the cookies we grew up with. Chips Ahoy remains one of the most widely known and most often chosen. Crunchy, chewy, or chunky, the variations change, but the original concept still stands. Open the bag and know exactly what is inside.
You can see more of my Commercial Food Photography on my website at https://www.secondfocus.com/index/G0000WFAqDJQOgKU Thanks!
December 4, 2025 | Categories: Uncategorized | Tags: American Snacks, black background food, Chips Ahoy, chocolate chip cookies, commercial food photography, cookie history, Food Photography, Ian Sitren, Iconic Snacks, Nabisco, National Cookie Day, packaged cookies, snack food | Leave a comment
National Chocolate Chip Cookie Day
Today is National Chocolate Chip Cookie Day—so I did my part by photographing this heroic mound of cookies instead of eating them. A public service, really.
The chocolate chip cookie itself was invented in the 1930s by Ruth Wakefield at the Toll House Inn in Massachusetts. She added chopped-up chocolate to cookie dough, expecting it to melt. It didn’t—and the chocolate chip was born. One of history’s most delicious accidents.
Mine came from a bag, not an inn, but they still ended up in front of my camera instead of disappearing into late-night regret. No stylists. No props. Just cookies on a black background—safe from temptation (mostly).
See more in my Commercial Food Photography gallery at:
https://www.secondfocus.com/index/G0000WFAqDJQOgKU
August 4, 2025 | Categories: Uncategorized | Tags: black background food photo, chocolate chip cookies, chocolate chip history, commercial food photography, cookie photography, cookie stack, cookies in bulk, Dessert Photography, fast food alternatives, food art, food on black backdrop, Food Photography, National Chocolate Chip Cookie Day, photo of cookies, photography gallery, Ruth Wakefield, secondfocus, snack food, Toll House cookies, unstyled food photography | Leave a comment

